5,881 research outputs found
Kinetic energy fluctuation-driven locomotor transitions on potential energy landscapes of beam obstacle traversal and self-righting
Despite contending with constraints imposed by the environment, morphology,
and physiology, animals move well by physically interactingwith the environment
to use and transition between modes such as running, climbing, and
self-righting. By contrast, robots struggle to do so in real world.
Understanding the principles of how locomotor transitions emerge from
constrained physical interaction is necessary for robots to move robustly using
similar strategies. Recent studies discovered that discoid cockroaches use and
transition between diverse locomotor modes to traverse beams and self-right on
ground. For both systems, animals probabilistically transitioned between modes
via multiple pathways, while its self-propulsion created kinetic energy
fluctuation. Here, we seek mechanistic explanations for these observations by
adopting a physics-based approach that integrates biological and robotic
studies.
We discovered that animal and robot locomotor transitions during beam
obstacle traversal and ground self-righting are barrier-crossing transitions on
potential energy landscapes. Whereas animals and robot traversed stiff beams by
rolling their body betweenbeam, they pushed across flimsy beams, suggesting a
concept of terradynamic favorability where modes with easier physical
interaction are more likely to occur. Robotic beam traversal revealed that,
system state either remains in a favorable mode or transitions to one when
energy fluctuation is comparable to the transition barrier. Robotic
self-righting transitions occurred similarly and revealed that changing system
parameters lowers barriers over which comparable fluctuation can induce
transitions. Thetransitionsof animalsin both systems mostly occurred similarly,
but sensory feedback may facilitate its beam traversal. Finally, we developed a
method to measure animal movement across large spatiotemporal scales in a
terrain treadmill.Comment: arXiv admin note: substantial text overlap with arXiv:2006.1271
Energy-based Modeling and Control of Interactive Aerial Robots:A Geometric Port-Hamiltonian Approach
Robotics 2010
Without a doubt, robotics has made an incredible progress over the last decades. The vision of developing, designing and creating technical systems that help humans to achieve hard and complex tasks, has intelligently led to an incredible variety of solutions. There are barely technical fields that could exhibit more interdisciplinary interconnections like robotics. This fact is generated by highly complex challenges imposed by robotic systems, especially the requirement on intelligent and autonomous operation. This book tries to give an insight into the evolutionary process that takes place in robotics. It provides articles covering a wide range of this exciting area. The progress of technical challenges and concepts may illuminate the relationship between developments that seem to be completely different at first sight. The robotics remains an exciting scientific and engineering field. The community looks optimistically ahead and also looks forward for the future challenges and new development
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